by Andy Kessler
"This place is spectacular."
It was, but I wasn't about to let on.
"Amazing." I stifled a yawn.
"And the artwork is something else," Nancy, my wife, continued. "Now this is the way to live."
Paris is one of my favorite places in the world—one giant museum. The food, the wine, the artwork; even the people are nice, some of them anyway. After a quick connection with the gargoyles at Notre Dame—one of them reminds me of a kid I went to high school with—it was time to find things my wife Nancy and I hadn't seen before. No fan of wandering through trendy neighborhoods or doing mindless shopping, I hit on the idea of visiting a bunch of the smaller museums, set in once private homes like the Frick Museum in New York. Frick made his money turning coal into coke for making steel, later hooking up with Carnegie to form what would become U.S. Steel. He deserved a nice house.
My ploy worked, so it was off to Boulevard Haussmann and some wealthy dead French guy's house stuffed with beautiful paintings and sculptures and furnishings—the Jacquemart-André or the Cognacq-Jay. Or the André Jay?
"And over here is the living room, where formal entertaining for the close associates of Monsieur . . ." the guide droned on.
I could see a plate on a side table inscribed with "Liberté, Égalité, Fraternité." How very French. I was starting to go stir crazy. It was time to mix it up.
"Where are the speakers?" I whispered to Nancy.
"What?"
"Some nice B&O speakers and a decent subwoofer would do this room just right. Even just a PC running iTunes, or geez, at least a measly iPod." She shushed me.
"Look at that carpet," she suggested. "Hand woven, I'll bet."
"This rug's from Persia," I said, doing my best Eddie Murphy from the movie Trading Places. "But who cleans that? Do you think he had a Dirt Devil?"
"Be nice."
"If you'll step this way, we enter the family living quarters. This drawing room is where the family spent evenings, reading by candlelight, telling stories . . ."
"You could probably shoehorn a nice fifty-two-inch plasma over that dresser. I wonder if they had DirecTV then? If not, I wouldn't want to be this guy."
"Shhhhh."
"The bureau is a Louis XV, and the chairs are quite appropriate for the time period."
"They look really uncomfortable," I remarked. "You think they recline?"
"Would you be quiet?" Nancy said with a laugh. "I don't know you." I finally had her in the right spirit.
"The air conditioning bills must have been killer, at least five hundred a month."
"Stop."
"I can't. This guy has some nice art on the walls, but I wouldn't trade places with him for even a second."
"But he was an elite in Paris during their golden age," Nancy cooed.
"He's got nothing. I haven't seen one Blu-ray player, let alone a refrigerator, toaster oven, or espresso machine." I was on a roll. Why stop there? "If he had a garage, it smelled like horseshit, instead of sporting a four-hundred-horsepower, seven-passenger Suburban. How could he get to his country home in a couple of hours? It must have taken a full day in a carriage. And we flew here in nine hours on a 777—it would have taken him nine months to get to California. I guarantee he never made it for a visit."
"Yeah, but . . ."
"But nothing. This guy was poor. No computer, no Internet, no search engine, no YouTube videos. This guy has never seen Star Wars, for god's sake!"
"That's living?"
"Damn right. Should I go on?"
"Don't."
"Cell phone. GPS. Xbox. World of Warcraft. Métro. And," I paused to catch my breath, "I can almost guarantee le dude never used Twitter."
I got the eye roll from Nancy. I was pushing this beyond the point of no return.
"Let alone antibiotics, stents for heart attacks—he either died young of tuberculosis or, worse, watched as one of his kids died young. This guy was one of the richest in the world but he'd be considered living under the poverty line in our day."
"I'm going to the next museum by myself."
The experience got me thinking. I've been around the investment business for way too many years, trying to understand business cycles and product cycles, assessing management, picking stocks that go up, avoiding those that go down, but it wasn't until I gawked my way through Monsieur Elite's home off Boulevard Haussmann that I put my mind to the creeping change over the last one hundred years. You and I are nowhere as rich, on a relative basis, as this guy was, the envy of all, but in almost every other way, we have and do things every day that all the riches in the world back then couldn't buy. Damn, I forgot to mention microwave ovens, or Orville Redenbacher, or . . .
Somewhere along the way, you were probably force-fed some economics. An economy is about commerce and trade and me buying bread from the baker who buys meat from the butcher who buys candlesticks, blah, blah, blah. Econ 101 and all the macro mumbo jumbo of "price is where supply meets demand," and marginal costs meeting marginal utility, doesn't explain why I can find cheap flights on Southwest Airlines to Salt Lake City to go skiing, or why I can even afford to go skiing in the first place. Something creates all that wealth that the richest in the world never had, including Kevlar parabolic skis.
How about this line: Economics is about allocating scarce resources. Well, I guess that could work, but that implies there are only so many resources to go around, and that those who pay the most get the scarcest ones. But where did the jet come from, or the Kevlar, or the online travel agent? That definition is unsatisfying.
There is only one definition of an economy I've ever been comfortable with: a system that increases the standard of living of its participants. Period. Everything else from credit to money supply to quarterly earnings releases to minimum wages is just a tool or else a meaningless characteristic of an economy. Without that "increasing living standards" thing, you and I would still be living in caves, chasing squirrels and shoveling shit and dying young from minor infections.
Increasing standards of living doesn't happen automatically. It's not a gift from heaven. Someone has to invent the future.
But how do you find the next big thing?
How do you find things that go up and to the right and keep going up and up and up? How do you find companies to work for or to invest in that will let you create some real wealth? And how do you do well by the world?
Thirty years ago, as I started my so-called career, not a single person told me that computers and technology would get so cheap that they would practically end up being given away in boxes of Cheerios. Or that Wall Street and banking and money management would be turned inside out, uncorking money buried inside the musty trust departments of sclerotic banks. Instead of gathering dust, this money went fleeing to the higher returns from money market and mutual funds, thus allowing anyone with an idea to either invest or get access to capital to build a company of their own, go public, and create enormous wealth.
Just one little mention at a cocktail party, from someone, anyone, telling me about this, would have done me wonders. Not a peep!
On top of that, no one told me that tons and tons of jobs would be destroyed—and even more created. Who knew? Yet that's the world I had to navigate.
Today, the economy may have blown up, but the underlying principles of wealth creation still exist. Maybe even stronger than ever. How to tap them is not so obvious. But it's never obvious. You have to figure out how to create the future yourself.
The only way to truly succeed over time is to use your head, think out long-term trends, figure out where productivity exists (and therefore wealth is being created) in the economy, and invest your mind or your money alongside it.
I've seen it happen so many times. Someone comes up with a great idea and changes the world. The next big thing.
I met Michael Dell by phone in his dorm room where he was selling PCs and then met him in person well before Dell Inc. completely changed how personal computers were sold. By getting rid of an entire swath of middlemen, and lowering prices for all of us, he turned himself into a multibillionaire.
I met Steve Jobs as he was getting thrown out of Apple, and once more as he headed back in, when he expanded the company's mission from designing computers to MP3 players and then smart phones and tablets that have made it easier for all of us to get information by voice or by Web wherever we might find ourselves. He got rich—and you and I got richer lives.
I met Ed Catmull while sitting on the floor at LAX waiting for a delayed flight back to SFO. Pixar was working on its first feature film, Toy Story, which pioneered a whole new way to tell compelling stories. He (and Steve Jobs) got rich, but the rest of us got to see spectacular movies for ten bucks. Quite the bargain.
I met Carl Rosendahl, whose Pacific Data Images was doing similar things for Jeffrey Katzenberg and DreamWorks with a project called Shrek.
I met Larry Ellison as he was selling databases to corporations, when it wasn't so obvious that he was going to completely transform their back offices, squeezing out costs in their finance and supply chains and making them much more productive. Oracle saved businesses a fortune, and they passed the savings along to the rest of us in the form of everything from cheap goods at Walmart to cheap trades at Charles Schwab. Sure, Larry got rich—after all, he saved these companies a ton of money. But he made the rest of us rich, too. As costs go down, all of us get wealthier.
I've met Bill Gates many times, first after Microsoft went public. Gates was pitching Wall Street about upgrading to Windows from DOS (without much luck). Eventually, Wall Street discovered spreadsheets, which lowered their costs and made it vastly easier to do things like take two companies or two financial instruments and merge them into something financeable.
I met Gordon Moore and Andy Grove and Bob Noyce, the founders of Intel, just as they almost lost out to cheap Japanese memory makers—before turning the massive company on a dime to sell processors (at high margins) to the IBMs and Compaqs and then Dells of the world, driving faster and faster computers so better and better graphics could make computers easier to use for business and making all of us more productive—well, except for those of us who love video games.
I heard Sergey Brin and Larry Page speak to a small group a few years before Google went public. They wanted to know what you were going to search for before you even knew yourself.
I met Rupert Murdoch in the early nineties when he almost lost News Corporation under a siege of debt, and when he began transforming the entire media space, from newspapers to TV to film.
I met Mark Cuban when he and his partner Todd Wagner were peddling AudioNet to anyone in Silicon Valley who would listen, before they sold the audio and video streaming company to Yahoo! for $5.7 billion.
I met Mark Zuckerberg just as Facebook was crossing a few million users; he talked about lowering the cost of communications between groups of people. Today, a good chunk of the planet logs in to the site regularly to keep in touch with friends and family.
I can go on. Meg Whitman when she was at eBay, Jeff Bezos at Amazon, even a few telecom folks who were billionaires for a moment in time.
The cool thing about all these folks is that no one did them any favors. There was no government contract that guaranteed them success. No secret handshakes or sweetheart deals or smoky room concessions.
For the most part, society didn't do them any favors—each of them started small, but saw something big on the horizon and created a process to constantly improve, constantly innovate, and constantly sell exactly what was needed and then identify the next big thing on the new horizon.
Wouldn't you like to have their vision?
How do you find the next big thing?
Yeah, sure, none of them discovered penicillin or cured polio. But these folks increased my standard of living, your standard of living, half the world's standard of living, on par with any scientist or philanthropist. They created wealth for themselves, yes, but also for society as a whole, by making all of us more productive.
I don't care about and certainly don't idolize those billionaires, beyond what I've learned from them about how to find and create and leverage the next big things.
So, how was I lucky enough to meet all these folks?
Well, it was my job. I worked on Wall Street trying to find the next big things. It really was my job to find billionaires well before they hit it big so my investors and I could go along for the ride. And I made tons of mistakes, believe me. But eventually, I got good at it. It was not just finding driven people with the character and focus and guts to succeed. It was also about being in the right zip code, finding the next big applications and companies and industries well before they took off, when you could invest on the cheap and then sell when they were dear.
Along the way, I learned that those things that made me the most money were not so coincidentally the very same things that made society richer and the world a better place.
I call them Free Radicals. We've seen them throughout history.
Charles Curtis's 1903 steam turbine generator electricity to the masses. Using that electricity, in 1907, James Spangler, a janitor with asthma, invented an electric suction-sweeper, today's vacuum cleaner. William David Coolidge's thermionic X-ray tube of 1913 changed medicine. That same year, the Walker brothers in Philadelphia invented the first electric dishwasher. In 1916, Clarence Birdseye perfected the flash-freezing process (and Birds Eye potato puffs). In 1928, Thomas Midgley, Albert Henne, and Robert McNary synthesized the first chlorofluorocarbons (trademarked as Freon in 1930), ushering in safe refrigerators and air conditioning (other coolants eventually replaced Freon). Paul M. Zoll created the cardiac pacemaker in 1952. And Percy L. Spencer in 1945 watched a magnetron melt candy, leading to the invention of microwave ovens.
Lots of housecleaners lost their jobs to vacuum cleaners. Lots of servants weren't hired or husbands yelled at because of electric dishwashers. Freezers and Birds Eye frozen food put a lot of cooks out of work and on and on.
Free Radicals found situations to combust and destroy, but in the end, it was only to make room to build the new—disrupt the status quo, do more with less, advance society, drive progress rather than have progress drive them.
A Free Radical is someone who gets wealthy inventing the future by helping others live longer and better. Rather than be a burden on society or tax society or milk society for all it's worth, a Free Radical improves society and is paid handsomely for doing so.
Rather than building huts in Costa Rica, a Free Radical invents cheaper building materials, improves the logistics of getting materials where they need to be, creates a market to discover the right prices for materials and labor, educates Costa Ricans, hires them to do twenty-first-century work well beyond the grueling labor in sweatshops of the Far East—and in the end, they can afford to build their own homes. A Free Radical doesn't even have to set foot in Costa Rica to be a hero, though likely an unsung one.
Create wealth and change the world. It sounds oxymoronic. Do good by doing well. It sounds like a rationalization for someone getting rich, but you've seen it just like I have. Ted Hoff invented the microprocessor and has changed billions of lives for the better. Lloyd Conover invented the antibiotic tetracycline and has probably saved a billion lives from early demise. Larry Page and Sergey Brin perfected search and created wealth not only for themselves but for everyone who plugs into their electronic ecosystem.
Free Radicals, all of them. It's not the only way to get wealthy, but it's the most rewarding for the rest of us.
You can be one too. I've laid out a set of Rules – or criteria to help entrepreneurs or investors or job hunters figure out where the upside is. 12 Rules and a Bonus Rule (I once worked in a bakery and still love fresh bread to this day!) They are: Scale, Waste, Horizontal, Edge, Productive, Adaptive, Eat People, Markets, Exceptionalism, Market Entrepreneur, Zero Marginal Cost, Virtual Pipe and Highest Return. You'll have to read the book to see what I mean.
But I've got to tell you—if all you want to do is take over some old-line company and milk it for all it's worth, I can't help you. Or if you insist on pursuing some protected franchise in banking or insurance or medicine or whatever—forget it, you're on your own. You may get rich milking the rest of us, but society won't get rich along with you.
But if you want to make something for nothing, help the world be more productive, create wealth for the masses beyond anyone's imagination . . . I can steer you in the right direction whether you're an entrepreneur or an investor or just looking for the right career.
Just be warned. This is not some get-rich-quick scheme. You won't find tips on flipping properties in these pages. What I'm talking about is a process that works over years and decades to keep generating wealth for those who sell and those who buy. And that is what generates progress. And wealth.
I know. I've seen it happen. As I said, I've gone along for the ride many times.
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